Lace manufacturers

Cooper

3

11

6

Mycroft

14

6

0

George, lace manufacturer

Jackson

12

10

3

Charles, lace manufacturer

Rowley

2

12

0

James

32

10

0

Mrs Hannah, lace curtain manufacturer

Saywell - shop

11

14

0

Noel, lace manufacturer

Ditto - machine

13

15

0

Ditto - mending

5

4

0

Houses

Heard

3

0

0

Soar

3

0

0

Lowe

4

17

6

Thornhill

6

5

0

Richard, 42 Villa St.

Small houses, Villa St.

9

8

6

Shop

Maltby

6

5

0

Wollaton Rd.

£307

3

7

Appendix 3 - Main debtors (over £50 owed) of Pollards.

From a Statement of Affairs dated 1900All were lace merchants
(manufacturers) buying lace from the factory, except Hicking (dyers).The addresses, almost all in the Lace Market, Nottingham, are mostly taken
from Fisherís Lace and Hosiery Trade Directory, 1897; those in brackets are from other sources.The sums owed are given to the nearest pound and
most will have been for lace, fairly recently supplied and awaiting settlement.

Firm

Sum owed

Address

Stiebel Kauffman

£927

Stoney Street

Birconshaw

£767

High Pavement

Vickers & Hine

£593

(Weekday Cross)

Redgate & Caborn

£351

Heathcote Street

Kirk &amp Son

£292

St Mary Gate

Buckland

£277

St Mary Gate

Hicking

£211

(Queens Road, dyers)

Jacoby & Co.

£167

(Broadgate)

Simon May

£128

Weekday Cross

Cuckson & Hazeldine

£80

High Pavement

Elliott & Williams

£60

(Nottingham)

Tomlinson

£50

(Perhaps High Pavement)

Appendix 4 - Rents paid by tenants at the Anglo Scotian Mills in 1910, the first full year under Arthur Pollardís ownership.

The
nature of the businesses is as described in the 1910 Wrightís Directory of Nottinghamshire or as otherwise stated.Rents were by "gentlemanís
agreement" without formal leases.2 A standing is the space for a lace machine.

Tenant

Quarterly rent

Notes

until

Astle, H.B.

£23.14.6

Standings and store, curtain man. Went bankrupt (note by John Pollard jnr)

1921

Astle Bros

£16.8.0

Two rooms. Engineers, soon renamed Anglo Scotian Engineering

1927

Bates & Young(with E.Cope & Co.)

£19.16.6

3 standings & office. (lace manufacturer in Sales Particulars)

1910

Baldwin, R. & Co.

£21.2.6

5 standings (lace manufacturer). Moved to Humber (note by John Pollard jnr)

1910

Cuckson, Hazeldine & Manderfield, The Poplars, also Stoney St Nottm

£101.5.0

Standings & store, lace manufacturer

1952

Brecknock, W.

£9.15.0

Standings

1927

Dobson, E. & F.

£75

Standings, curtain manufacturer

1922

Dexter, Messrs F. & Co.

£25

Standings, lace manufacturer, but became the Beeston Embroidery3 in 1911, rent of house within the
factory added in 1913

1952

Houldsworth, J.The Nottingham Flock Co.

£88.15.0

Replaced after 1910 by R. Koppel & Co., lace curtain manufacturer

1910

Parkes & Tomlin

£29.11.6

Standings & cotton store, lace manufacturer

1923

Roberts, A.H.

£4.4.6

Rent

1909

Wallis & Longden

£11.14.0

Rent, lace machinery firm

1910

Truman, T.H.

£17.4.6

Rent & store, lace manufacturer; replaced by Richardson

1910

Thompson

short period,small sum

Replaced by Mears

1909

Fletcher, R.

£9.15.0

Lace manufacturer. From 1913 includes rent of machines as well as standings

1927

Quarterly sum£453.6.6Annual sum£1813.4.0

Appendix 5 - Specification and valuation of machines

Part of an early (undated, but probably c1900) valuation of the lace machines in Swiss
Mills.The reader may recognise, from an earlier section, some of the features mentioned, but only the lace specialist will understand
all

1 John Pollard, in conversation with Sheila Mason, remembers the ice cold water from the well, even in summer. It was collected in jugs for
drinking, but the Water Authorities said it was contaminated and it was capped.2 In the same directory, 6 lace manufacturers are listed with premises in "Pollardís Factory" (Swiss Mills); Lowe Brothers,
Frederick Spencer, William Spencer, Aubrey Topham, Joseph Topham and Charles Whitehouse, in addition to Pollards themselves. No rent books
have been found for Swiss Mills.3 The Beeston Embroidery was taken over by Arthur Pollard c1915.